Hell
Hell
environment
What does an ecosystem contain in it?
1. Living organisms
a. Food webs- a simple model of how energy and matter move
through the ecosystem
(http://www.mhhe.com/biosci/genbio/virtual_labs/BL_02/BL_02.
html)
i. Producers
ii. First order heterotrophs
iii. Second order heterotrophs
iv. Third order heterotrophs
b. Relationships
i. Symbiotic
ii. Communalistic
iii. Parasitic
c. Heterotrophs
i. Herbivores- eats plants only (1st order heterotrophs)
ii. Omnivores- eats plants and animals (2nd order
heterotrophs)
iii. Carnivores- eats animals only (3rd order heterotrophs)
iv. Decomposers
d. Autotrophs (producers)
i. Photosynthetic- energy from light
2. A source of energy (Sun for most)
3. Possible abiotic factors
a. Rocks
b. Sand
c. Wind
d. Water
e. Light
f. pH
g. Salinity
h. Gasses
i. Temperature
j. Pressure
k. Soil
l. Feces/urine
Within a food web each level higher on the web losses energy due to
decomposers. The energy only moves in one direction. Energy
conservation efficiency is that amount of energy lost on each level up
which is around 10%. All the energy lost within a food chain is lost as heat.
Biomass- a pyramid of this shows the weight of living things at each level
in the food web. The biomass is the average weight of every species
within a level of the food web then by multiplying that number by the
amount of individuals within a species. In terrestrial ecosystems, biomass
and trophic level are inversely proportionally. In fresh water/marine
ecosystems biomass and trophic level are proportional, this is because
algae have a shorter life span and are more edible which makes their
biomass smaller and not gather.